In this course, you’ll learn the key components of modern-day investment strategies which utilize fintech. Professors Natasha Sarin and Chris Geczy of the Wharton School have designed this course to help you understand the complex structure of payment methods and financial regulations, so you can determine how fintech plays a role in the future of investing. Through analysis of robo-advising and changing demographic forces, you’ll learn how basic elements of trust underlie complex choice architecture in investments and impact investing. You’ll also explore payment methodologies and how fintech is emerging as an entrepreneurial solution to both investments and payment systems. By the end of this course, you’ll be able to identify different financial technologies, and understand the dynamic between the innovations and regulations, and employ best practices in developing a fintech strategy for yourself or your business. No prerequisites are required for this course, although a basic understanding of credit cards and other payment methods is helpful.

CF

clear and concise teachings lead to a quick understanding of the material presented. video length was great; never too long. visuals were easy to understand and interpret.

AA

Jun 30, 2019

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My first course in Coursera and it did not disappoint! I recommend this FinTech course to anybody seek a quick yet detailed introduction to the world of FinTech! Thank you

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Module 4: Regulation

In this module, you’ll be introduced to the concerns and innovations in financial regulation and focus more closely on the emergence of fintech. By discussing theoretical criticisms of regulation, you’ll gain a better understanding behind balance between regulation and innovation and the tradeoffs that come with the balance. Through analyzing the Great Recession of 2008 and its impact on regulations in the financial industry, you’ll study the emergence of fintech as an entrepreneurial solution for financial businesses. Through identification of fintech and outlining its massive growth, you will evaluate the main benefits and issues within this the emerging field. By the end of this module, you’ll be able to identify how regulations manage innovative approaches, and employ best practices of utilizing fintech in your organization while understanding the global landscape of fintech regulation

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Christopher Geczy

Adjunct Professor of Finance

Natasha Sarin

Assistant Professor of Law

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In this module, we're going to spend some time trying to think about how we regulate financial technology and actually what is financial technology before we can get to the regulatory frameworks that are going to make the most sense in this setting. I want to start very broadly and try and understand the theoretical criticisms around regulation period, and then try and understand the concerns and the innovations that we've made with respect to financial regulation in particular since the Great Recession. I then want us to focus on exactly what FinTech is, why it's growing, how it's growing, and also how different countries have approached the regulation of financial technology and what lessons that can teach us in the future going forward. The traditional like Chicago style, economic view of regulation has been a suspicious one. So George Stigler who famously won the Nobel Prize for the theory of Economic Regulation, made the following observation. "Regulation may be actively sought by an industry, or it may be thrust upon it. As a rule regulation is acquired by the industry and is designed and operated primarily for its benefit. At worst, regulation hinders growth and innovation through bureaucracy." This Stiglerion perspective is a bit about the nature of regulatory capture. So because regulation will be made by government regulators even well-intentioned regulators, those entities with resources like large financial institutions who can lobby and persuade the regulators that their concerns are incredibly valid, can use regulation as a tool to try and conform regulations so it is best equipped to deliver precisely what the industry requests. This can mean both under regulating financial institutions or in general under regulating industry. But it can also mean aggressive regulation in certain settings for the purpose of keeping incumbents with significant market power in these domains, and making it more difficult for new competitors to emerge and comply with existing regulatory burdens. Milton Friedman view of regulation is very similar. His point made very vividly is that, "Corruption is government intrusion into market efficiencies in the form of regulations." So the view is that the market functions well, it functions freely, and regulation is going to just come in and muck up a well-functioning market and for the purpose of advantaging certain industry participants who are best able to control the regulatory process. This view of regulation is certainly not shared by all and certainly not voiced by regulators in the aftermath of the financial crisis, which many view as the byproduct of an overly lax regulatory framework with respect to large financial institutions and financial intermediaries more broadly. Christine Lagarde has made the point that regulation fields especially necessary in sectors like the financial sector, where large scale crises in this sector like the Great Recession can expose entire countries around the globe to substantial and significant catastrophic effects, if there is in fact a crisis like the recession. This is distinct from failures in a particular industry which is less connected than the banking sector, and less attached to every single decision and every single choice that consumers and firms make with respect to the investments that they choose for themselves in the businesses that they operate. Elizabeth Warren made this observation with respect to the financial crisis that although in other industries more conventional consumer industries like car industries, toys, aspirin, meat, toasters, the analogy that chooses quite vividly, nearly every product sold has passed basic safety regulations well in advance of being marketed and sold. But consumer credit tends to be what she calls a buyer-beware, wild west, which is especially surprising given Christine regards observation that crises in financial markets have the potential to create real systemic consequences for the globe as a whole. Interestingly, industry is also quite understanding of the need for good and thoughtful regulation in financial markets. Jamie Dimon the CEO of J.P. Morgan makes the point that, good regulation should simultaneously be conducive to business and to consumer protection, allowing businesses to innovate and create structures that will be advantageous to consumers without worrying about having to comply with overly burdensome regulation, but simultaneously protecting consumers from the risks that they encountered in the Great Recession. George Soros makes the point that the problem with the Milton Friedman conception of markets being freely operational and regulation being a means of corrupt interference in well-functioning markets, is that in his conception markets in fact are imperfect. So you'd need regulation, but of course regulators are also imperfect. So the regulatory process requires simultaneous adaption, both by industry and by regulators to come to a set of processes that are going to well protect consumers in these markets.